India has been pushing for an agreement with Japan on the lines of a 2008 deal with the United States under which India was allowed to import US nuclear fuel and technology without giving up its military nuclear programme.
But Japan wants explicit guarantees from India, which has not signed the international Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, to strictly limit nuclear tests and to allow more intrusive inspections of its nuclear facilities to ensure that spent fuel is not diverted to make bombs.
India, which sees its weapons as a deterrent against nuclear-armed neighbours China and Pakistan, has sought to meet Japan's concerns and over the past month the two sides have speeded up negotiations ahead of Modi's visit.
"Serious efforts are being made to resolve any special concerns that Japan has. Whether it will be fully resolved and ready for signing before the end of the PM's trip is unclear," said a former member of India's top atomic energy commission who has been consulted in the drafting of the energy pact.
Modi and Abe will not seal an agreement at next week's summit, TV Tokyo reported on Thursday, but the meeting will be closely watched for any progress toward a pact. Japanese officials were tight-lipped about prospects for a nuclear deal.
Modi travels to Japan on Saturday for a five-day visit, his first major bilateral trip since taking over in May. The visit is being billed as an attempt by the two democracies to balance the rising weight of China across Asia.
Modi and host Prime Minister Shinzo Abe are also expected to strengthen defence ties, speeding up talks on the sale of an amphibious aircraft to the Indian navy. Abe is keen to expand Japan's network of security partnerships with countries such as Australia and India to cope with the challenge presented by China.
The two leaders will agree to have their countries jointly produce mixed rare earth minerals and metals, key elements in defence industry components and modern technology, the Nikkei business daily said on Thursday.
Another focus is infrastructure, with the Indian leader seeking Japanese backing for the high-speed 'bullet' trains he promised to voters in his election campaign.
But it is the nuclear pact that could transform ties in a way the deal with the United States did by establishing India as a strategic partner, although nuclear commerce with the United States has since foundered because of concern over India's liability laws.
Japanese companies are also reluctant to step in without clarity on nuclear disaster compensation, especially in the wake of the Fukushima catastrophe of March 2011, the world's worst since Chernobyl in 1986.
Foundations
A civil nuclear energy pact with India would give Japanese nuclear technology companies such as Toshiba Corp and Hitachi Ltd access to India's fast-growing market as they seek opportunities overseas to offset a backlash at home in response to the Fukushima disaster.
India operates 20 mostly small reactors at six sites with a capacity of 4,780 MW, or 2% of its total power capacity, according to the Nuclear Power Corporation of India Limited. The government hopes to increase its nuclear capacity to 63,000 MW by 2032 by adding nearly 30 reactors.
India is considering a Japanese proposal for a separate commitment not to test nuclear weapons over and above a self-imposed moratorium it declared after testing in 1998.
Another possibility is that Modi gives a personal assurance to Abe on India's nuclear weapons programme to help allay concern in Japan, the only country to have suffered a nuclear attack and which has since been a champion of non-proliferation and disarmament.
"India and Japan are laying the foundations of a bigger deal," said former vice chief of Indian army Lieutenant General A S Lamba, an expert on ties with Japan.
"It's no use rushing into something that fails to get off the ground, which is what happened to the India-US agreement. This is being constructed slowly. This is a defining moment."
COMMENTS (17)
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@Bakhtiyar Ghazi Khan: The lion seems old, toothless and castrated.
@Bakhtiyar Ghazi Khan: knock knock.....who is there ? Lion...sorry Tiger Niazi.
We r watching trailer of how muslims are made in iraq & how it become religion. Every problem of world & mass killing was happend due to muslim even both world war due to mass killing of chirschtan by khalifa of turkey ....
@Bakhtiyar Ghazi Khan: Are you sure there are lions in Pakistan ? I thought you had hunted them to extinction.
"Japanese nuclear technology companies such as Toshiba Corp and Hitachi Ltd... seek opportunities overseas to offset a backlash at home in response to the Fukushima disaster."
Fukushima plant would be given as a free bonus in the deal. Anybody interested? LOL.
"But Japan wants explicit guarantees from India .... that spent fuel is not diverted to make bombs."
Modi smirking. Let the Japanese handover the materials once, and then we will see how dare they stop us using it for making the bombs. If USA and Canada couldn't stop us from doing that in 1974, what is reality of Japanese.
@Rashid: Yes.
@Bakhtiyar Ghazi Khan - "India is an elephant, but helpless and afraid of the Pakistani lion"
Not just India, the whole world is scared of the Pakistani lion... Hence the additional security checks at airports, refusal of visas, watchlists for the Pakistani cubs...
Learn what? The fact that money excuses terrorism? We learned that long ago when Indians invaded Kashmir and failed to invade the rest of Pakistan. Pakistanis can only rely on ourselves. We stand with all occupied Muslim lands together against colonialism and occupation.
India is an elephant, but helpless and afraid of the Pakistani lion. India is clumsy and fears a strong China and a tough Pakistan.
@Rahul: "Nehru gave the chant “Trust with destiny”" It is not "trust" but "tryst" with Destiny" which means an "appointment with Destiny". And it was not a "chant" but a statement of his hope.
@Rahul
Wasn't it "Tryst with destiny"?
@jay1980 Pakistan is learning from Somalia
This is the Indian century ......... Pakistan watch and learn.
Nehru gave the chant "Trust with destiny" and started the vision for India.And now I think a boy who sold tea during his childhood on railway station will complete vision.
Intresting thing to note that Japanese PM Abe follows only 3 people on twitter,one of them is PM Modi. Speaks Volume!!
Add on please Japan is pressurizing Modi government to supply Rare earth Metals & Minerals, at present japan imports from China. India is making new Plants in Rajasthan for Minerals processing.